The alpha 2-adrenergic receptors are linked to inhibition of adenylylcyclase and, under certain circumstances, to stimulation of phospholipid hydrolysis via pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins. Here we show that alpha 2-adrenergic receptors can couple to an alternative signaling pathway. When expressed in Rat-1 cells, stimulation of the alpha 2A receptor, which couples to Gi2 and Gi3, causes rapid, transient activation of the protooncogene product p21ras as measured by an increase in the amount of bound GTP. Furthermore, alpha 2A receptor stimulation causes rapid phosphorylation of the p42 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase. Pertussis toxin completely inhibits both p21ras activation and MAP kinase phosphorylation, but both responses appear to be independent of adenylylcyclase inhibition or phospholipase stimulation. Thus, alpha 2-adrenergic receptors can couple to the p21ras-MAP kinase pathway via Gi, which may explain the mitogenic potential of alpha 2 agonists in certain cell types; together with previous results, these findings further suggest that activation of this pivotal signaling pathway may be a common event in the action of Gi-coupled receptors.